Some Black Stars players at a game

In sport, humiliation has two fates: it can bury reputations or ignite comebacks. For Otto Addo and for Ghana, failure became the spark.

The return and the doubts

After the 2022 World Cup, Otto Addo returned to Borussia Dortmund as agreed in his contract.

Chris Hughton was hired to lead Ghana but Hughton’s reign was shaky: an unspectacular 2023 AFCON campaign and lukewarm starts to the World Cup qualifiers left many disappointed.

In March 2024, Ghana officially reappointed Otto Addo as head coach. Adding heat to his return was urgency: he was given a dual mission, to redeem Ghana in Africa and bring them to the world stage again.

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His reappointment was controversial: many wondered whether someone blamed for the previous collapse could now lead the turnaround. Yet, his first act under pressure was bold, and it worked.

Otto won his first two World Cup qualifiers: a 2–1 comeback win over Mali in Bamako, followed by a 4–3 thriller at home vs Central African Republic, which showed Ghana had teeth again.

But the scars of AFCON lingered. The real test came when the African qualifiers resumed, and with them, the same chaos.

The 2025 AFCON Collapse: A nation’s shame

The AFCON 2025 qualifiers began like a nightmare. At the iconic Baba Yara Stadium in Kumasi, once Ghana’s fortress, Angola struck late and claimed a 1–0 victory, ending a 24-year unbeaten run at home in September 2024.

Shock turned into despair. Niger, a team many expected Ghana to beat, held them to a 1–1 draw.

Then Sudan ground them to a halt: a 0–0 and then a 2–0 defeat. By the time Ghana went to Luanda to face Angola again in November 2024, the damage had been done.

A 1–1 draw there sealed their fate. The final blow was in their own backyard: Niger inflicted a 2–1 loss in Accra.

Six games. Zero wins. Only three points. Ghana, a footballing power in Africa, was left humiliated.

Pundits screamed for blood. Former officials demanded change. The name “Otto Addo” became shorthand for failure.

But just as the storm peaked, a rare decision was made: Ghana Football Association stuck by him. That choice would alter the narrative.

The Rebuild: Turning hammer into nail

When the World Cup qualifiers resumed, Otto Addo’s Ghana was not the same team that limped through the AFCON qualifiers.

The tactics sharpened. The belief hardened. The pressure turned into momentum.

After their breakout win in Bamako, they followed up with a 4–3 thriller vs the Central African Republic and a dominant 5–0 win over Chad in Accra. A 3–0 win in Madagascar showed their resolve on the road.

Even when they drew 1–1 with Chad, critics started whispering that Ghana might fold again. But Otto Addo stayed steady.

His men responded. Against Mali in Accra, a 1–0 victory reasserted control.

Then a 5–0 away win vs CAR all but sealed their ticket. In the final match vs Comoros, needing only a draw, Ghana won the game and secured their place in the World Cup.

Otto Addo’s legacy is now not just about winning, but about transformation. The AFCON failure that cut deep was the spark.

The same players once blamed, once ridiculed, became the ones who held the torch. In Ghana’s story now, shame didn’t break them.

It became the fuel that led them beyond Africa to the world stage again.

FKA/JE

Meanwhile, watch highlights of Ghana’s 1-0 win over Comoros in the World Cup qualifiers



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